Charlotte Osgood Mason : Politics of Misrepresentation

Charlotte Osgood Mason : Politics of Misrepresentation

d CHARLOTTE OSGOOD MASON: POLITICS OF MISREPRESENTATION by Melinda Booth Graduate Student in English In Harlem Renaissance studies, the mention of Charlotte Os­ good Mason incites suspicion of the wealthy widow who plunged herself into the world of black culture and art during the late 1920’s. Fascinated by the elevated spirituality she at­ tributed to “primitive” peoples like Native Americans and African Americans, Mason invested her considerable monetary and social resources in the research, writing, music and art of blacks during the Harlem Renaissance—the age of “Harlema­ niacs,” and “Negrotarians,” when white interest in black artis­ tic and popular culture skyrocketed. Mason forged relation­ ships (personal, financial, or both) with poet Langston Hughes, author Zora Neale Hurston, and that power broker of black culture, Alain Locke. Preferring to remain an anony­ mous voice, Mason insisted that the artists she patronized refer to her only as “Godmother.” Very few first-hand accounts of the influential patron exist—exactly how, it appears, she would have wanted it. Hailed as “one of the mysteries of the Harlem Renaissance,” Mason’s presence in modern Harlem Renaissance scholarship consists of correspondences, legal contracts and social lore cobbled together (Hemenway 104). Biographers and critics 49 traditionally fault Mason for her essentialist fascination with a primitiveness unspoiled by Western society. However, resist­ ance to Mason as a white patron of black artists proves trou­ blesome in light of a simultaneous racial uplift movement that was at times largely dependent on allegedly essential, redemp­ tive “black” qualities. Her confidante, scholar Alain Locke, ad­ hered to a political agenda determined to advance “the Negro in his essential traits, in the full perspective of his achievement and possibilities” (Locke ix). Mason selected the artists she funded based on their po­ tential to artistically express the primitivism she believed to be inextricably linked to the African race. She provided stipends for the travels and lifestyle of writers Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes, and she frequently edited their work. Both Hurston and Hughes broach the subject of patronage and Godmother in their autobiographies, Dust Tracks on a Road and The Big Sea. Hurston and Hughes biographers Robert Hemen­ way and Arnold Rampersad, respectively, weigh in on the con­ ditions and effects of Mason’s involvement as white patron. In this paper I will explore how portrayals of Mason by modern scholars like Hemenway, Rampersad, and other Harlem Re­ naissance anthologists and critics reflect the conflicting agen­ das that exist in Harlem Renaissance studies when compared to the autobiographical works of Hurston and Hughes. In her autobiography Dust Tracks on a Road, Zora Neale Hurston writes simply that her “relations with Godmother were curious” (175). Although she devotes relatively little space to the patron-artist relationship with Mason, Hurston offers a brief glimpse at their unique bond. The vivacious young au­ thor and the elderly, white heiress might seem to have little in common, but Hurston claims the “extremely human” Mason was “just as pagan as I. She had lived for years among the Plains Indians and had collected a beautiful book of Indian lore” (176). (Mason’s interest in so-called primitive peoples uncor­ rupted by western culture began with Native Americans and extended to African Americans.) “She is altogether in sympa­ 50 thy with [the Negroes],” Hurston claims, “because she says truthfully they are utterly sincere in living” (177). This notion of sincerity became the yardstick against which Mason judged all of Hurston’s work: Godmother could be as tender as mother-love when she felt that you had been right spiritually. But anything in you, however clever, that felt like insincerity to her, called forth her well-known “This is nothing! It has no soul in it. You have broken the law!” (177) Hurston quickly learned Mason was capable of “cutting off your outer pretenses, and bleeding your vanity like a rusty nail” when she sensed “a lie, spoken, acted or insinuated.” God­ mother could be a harsh critic, but to Hurston she remained “an earnest patron of the arts” (177). Although she had “a great deal to talk about,” with Mason and her assistants Cor­ nelia Chapin (a sculptor) and Katherine Biddle (a poet), Hurston admits to sometimes feeling “like a rabbit at a dog convention.” Only after a “proper straightening,” and assur­ ance that she “saw the light,” did the three women lavish praise and attention on Hurston (176). Beginning with their first meeting in New York in Sep­ tember 1927, Hurston and Mason forged an intimate friend­ ship. Hurston believed “there was and is a psychic bond be­ tween us. She could read my mind, not only when I was in her presence, but thousands of miles away” (175). Many miles did indeed test their bond when, in 1928, the arthritic Mason of­ fered to fund Hurston’s return to the south for an anthropo­ logical study of black folklore and culture on her behalf. God­ mother provided a car, a two hundred dollar per month stipend, and a camera; Zora signed a contractual agreement that all her research was Mason’s property (Hemenway 105). Mason’s insistence that Hurston “tell the tales, sing the songs, do the dances, and repeat the raucous sayings and do­ ings of the Negro farthest down” allowed Hurston to redeem herself from past failures in her anthropological studies but clearly limited the extent to which she might celebrate her 51 newfound success (Hurston 177). Godmother owned the rights to her research and directed it from afar. At times, Hurston felt “that she ought not to exert herself to supervise every little detail. It destroys my self respect.” However, she quickly followed this complaint to Hughes with a reminder that “I do care for her deeply, don’t forget that” (Kaplan 157). Hurston may have played into Mason’s vision of herself as spiritual guide, as when she addresses her in a letter as “dear­ est, little mother of the primitive world” (Kaplan 123). Grati­ tude bordering on groveling peppers her missives to God­ mother in New York while she traveled the south: I am afraid that I am helplessly crude, Godmother dar­ ling. Please don’t let my clumsiness distress you too keenly. My wish is not to shorten your years and make mis­ erable your days. Just the opposite. Don’t pay me no mind. In your magnificence, shut your eyes and ears to my crudities, and focus your glasses on my tiny goodnesses. That is the inner courtesy, of which you are the high priestess. I mean to give you pleasure always. (Kaplan 242) Although the two women remained close during Hurston’s travels, Alain Locke often acted as intermediary be­ tween Mason and Hurston. Hurston herself saw both Locke and close friend and fellow godchild Langston Hughes as parts to an artistic whole. In one letter to Locke, Hurston notes, “I was very happy to hear from you. I had just had a letter from both Godmother and Langston so the circuit is complete” (Ka­ plan 118). The overlapping, and eventually undercutting, re­ lationships of these four individuals impact modern portrayals of Mason’s role in the Harlem Renaissance. Robert Hemenway, writing in Zora Neale Hurston: A Liter­ ary Biography, extrapolates on Hurston’s letters, autobiography and secondary sources, vividly portraying Mason’s influence on the author’s career. The contract that paid for Hurston’s journey south and provided for Mason’s sole ownership of the resulting research “reveals much about the nature of white pa­ tronage for black artists during the twenties” (105). He grants 52 that it allowed Hurston to reassert herself as an anthropologist, but argues, “it also eventually led to dependency and bitter­ ness” (105). Emphasizing the extent to which she was be­ holden to Mason, Hemenway relieves Hurston of much re­ sponsibility at all for her choice to cooperate with the wealthy patron. After all, “Hurston can hardly be blamed for pursuing the one source of funding open to her” (108). She needed Mason’s support, a need that was “quite material, and Hurston knew it, whether she admitted it to herself or not” (108). Fi­ nancial entanglements, for Hemenway, defined Mason’s rela­ tionships with the artists she supported. “The problem with Mrs. Mason, as perhaps with all patrons,” he sweepingly pro­ claims, “was that she expected some return on her money. In Hurston’s case it was a report on the aboriginal sincerity of rural southern black folk; in Hughes’s, it was the beating of tom-tom’s in the breast of the urban black poet” (107). Indeed, Langston Hughes provides further material for Hemenway’s rendering of Mason. “When a rich woman is in­ terested in a person’s work,” he writes, referring to their first meeting on Park Avenue, “pressing fifty-dollar bills into his hands without asking anything in return, it is not easy to see the self-satisfaction she needs” (107). While Hemenway doubts Hughes’s ability to grasp Mason’s motives in the mo­ ment, he posits, “it is from the vantage of history that Mrs. Mason’s kindnesses take on their clearest pattern” (107). Here he seems to claim for himself an ahistorical clarity on the roots and results of Mason’s “kindnesses.” Clearly, Mason impressed Hughes at their first meeting in much the same way that she entranced Hurston. In his autobi­ ography The Big Sea, he describes their first meeting in her spa­ cious Park Avenue apartment, “with attendants in livery at the door and a private elevator landing” (234). Dazzled by the sprawling view of New York below and the display of wealth within, Hughes recounts his initial impressions of Mason: I found her instantly one of the most delightful women I had ever met, witty and charming, kind and sympathetic, 53 very old and white-haired, but amazingly modern in her ideas, in her knowledge of books and theater, of Harlem, and of everything then taking place in the world.

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